How can I get help fast?

Stop! Unless you have taken out a commercial support agreement with a suitable provider, you'll need to take the lead in solving your problem.

The Virgo forum is there for you to discuss your problem with others, who may then be able to give you some hints to help you take the next step.

But before you rush in and post your application saying "It doesn't work. Please help!" or claiming that your schedule is tight and "this is an emergency", please read the whole ofHow to Ask Questions the Smart Way (but note that page is not a "help desk" for Virgo) and you'll be much more likely to get the help you need — fast.

How can I change the version of Spring framework in the user region?

You can upgrade or downgrade the version of Spring framework in the user region provided the new version satisfies the version range required by Virgo. Virgo 3.0.x can use 3.0.x versions of Spring framework. To use Spring framework 3.1.x requires Virgo 3.5.0 or later. To use Spring framework 3.2.x requires Virgo 3.6.0 or later.

To upgrade or downgrade, delete the Spring framework bundles and .libd file in repository/ext and then add the corresponding bundles and .libd file for the replacement version of Spring framework. The Spring framework bundles are listed in the .libd file if you are uncertain about which they are. Then re-start Virgo with the -clean switch and the user region should now run with the replacement version of Spring framework.

If you want to use a Spring framework version less than 3.1, you will have to use Virgo 2.1.x, 3.0.x, or 3.5.x. Virgo 3.6.x requires Spring framework 3.1 or later (see bug 398393).

If you want to use a Spring framework version less than 3.0 (for instance 2.5.6.SEC2) you will have to use Virgo 2.1.x or Virgo Jetty Server 3.0. The reason for this is that Virgo Server for Apache Tomcat 3.0.x ships with Tomcat 7 and Servlet 3.0, while Spring framework 2.5.6 import range allows maximum Servlet 2.5 and this makes the two incompatible.

How can I programmatically deploy applications to Virgo?

This can be achieved using the MBeans registered by Virgo. It's best to explore them first using something like JConsole. The deployer MBean can be used to specify an artifact with a URI that should be deployed (installed and started). Prefixes "file:" and "repository:" can be used. In the case of repository a URL of the form "repository://type/name[/version]" will refer to an artifact in a provisioning repository. The square brackets indicate that the trailing "/version" is optional, in which case Virgo uses the highest version available, and are not part of the URL. In the case of a bundle, "type" is "bundle" and "name" is the bundle symbolic name (and if "version" is specified, it is the bundle version).

Note that you can also install bundles using BundleContext.installBundle and they will be installed in the same region as the bundle whose bundle context was used to perform the install. However, bundles installed in this way will not pass through the Virgo deployment pipeline and will not be subject to the transformations normally applied to bundles as they are deployed in Virgo.

My Web Application Bundle stopped working when I moved to Virgo 3.x. What happened?

Virgo Server for Apache Tomcat 3.0 conforms more strictly to the OSGi web applications specification and does not apply default values to some of the manifest headers of a WAB like it used to in Virgo 2.x.

You can easily check whether this is the problem as follows.

As a migration aid, which may be removed in future releases, the previous behaviour may be re-instated by configuring the Web Integration Layer to set WABHeaders=defaulted in $SERVER_HOME/repository/ext/org.eclipse.virgo.web.properties. Please note there is a known issue with certain WAR files which may be worked around using this migration aid.

Should I put Spring XML files in META-INF/spring or WEB-INF?

You should put Spring application context XML configuration files in the WEB-INF directory of a web application bundle and in the META-INF/spring directory of a non-web bundle.

Putting these files in the META-INF/spring directory of a web application bundle is a common mistake and produces unpredictable results since Spring DM will attempt to build an application context independently of, and asynchronously from, the web application.

Why is there both a config and a configuration directory?

The config directory has always contained Virgo configuration files. When Virgo Nano and its support for p2 provisioning was introduced in Virgo 3.5.0, a configuration directory was added (see bug 324991 for details). The directory name configuration in the install's root is used by default in p2.

The Configuration chapter of the Virgo User Guide makes it clear which configuration goes in each directory.

Why is my required bundle with version x.y.z. not resolved?

To specify a version in a Require-Bundle header an (OSGi standard) attribute bundle-version is needed.

Require-Bundle: bar;bundle-version="[x.y.z,x.y.z]"

The attribute is spelled bundle-version= rather than version= as used with Import-Package. A misspelled attribute can show the following error:

Resolver report:
A Require-Bundle could not be resolved. Caused by missing constraint in bundle <foo_1.0.0>
constraint: <Require-Bundle: bar; bundle-version="0.0.0">

If a required bundle cannot be resolved check the spelling of the attribute as well as the location of the required bundle.

What's the difference between Virgo Server for Apache Tomcat and Virgo Jetty Server?

Virgo Server for Apache Tomcat (VTS) is based on embedded Tomcat, so its configuration and behaviour is familiar to Tomcat users. Virgo Jetty Server (VJS) is based on Jetty, so its configuration and behaviour is familiar to Jetty users.

Please refer to the official Tomcat and Jetty sites for details of these projects.

Both VTS and VJS support standard OSGi Web Application Bundles, but only VTS supports WAR files (see bug 336955).

VTS supports the hosted repository application and can act as a Virgo repository server, but VJS cannot.